Evaluation and clinical applicability of angiography-derived assessment of coronary microcirculatory resistance: a [15O]H2O PET study

Publication date

2025

Authors

Jukema, Ruurt A.
Raijmakers, Pieter G.
Hoshino, Masahiro
Driessen, Roel S.
van Diemen, Pepijn A.
Knuuti, Juhani
Maaniitty, Teemu
Twisk, Jos
Kooistra, Rolf A.
Timmer, Janny

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

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License

taverne

Abstract

The introduction of wire-free microcirculatory resistance index from functional angiography (angio-IMR) promises swift detection of coronary microvascular dysfunction, however it has not been properly validated. We sought to validate angio-IMR against invasive IMR and PET derived microvascular resistance (MVR). Moreover, we studied if angio-IMR could aid in the detection of ischemia with non-obstructive coronary arteries (INOCA). In this investigator-initiated study symptomatic patients underwent [15O]H2O positron emission tomography (PET) and invasive angiography with 3-vessel fractional flow reserve (FFR). Invasive IMR was measured in 40 patients. Angio-IMR and QFR were computed retrospectively. MVR was defined as the ratio of mean distal coronary pressure to PET derived coronary flow. PET and QFR/angio-IMR analyses were performed by blinded core labs. The right coronary artery was excluded. A total of 211 patients (mean age 61 ± 9, 148 (70%) male) with 312 vessels with successful angio-IMR analyses were included. Angio-IMR correlated moderately with invasive IMR (r = 0.48, p < 0.01), whereas no correlation was found between angio-IMR and MVR (r=-0.07, p = 0.25). Angio-IMR did not differ for vessels without obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) (FFR-) but with reduced stress perfusion (PET+) compared to vessels without obstructive CAD (FFR-) with normal stress perfusion (PET-) (median 28.19 IQR 20.42–38.99 vs. 31.67 IQR 23.47–40.63, p = 0.40). Angio-IMR correlated moderately with invasively measured IMR, whereas angio-IMR did not correlate with PET derived MVR. Moreover, angio-IMR did not reliably identify patients with INOCA.

Keywords

Angio-IMR, IMR, INOCA, MVR, PET, Taverne, Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Citation

Jukema, R A, Raijmakers, P G, Hoshino, M, Driessen, R S, van Diemen, P A, Knuuti, J, Maaniitty, T, Twisk, J, Kooistra, R A, Timmer, J, Reiber, J H C, van der Harst, P, Cramer, M J, van der Hoef, T, Knaapen, P & Danad, I 2025, 'Evaluation and clinical applicability of angiography-derived assessment of coronary microcirculatory resistance : a [ 15 O]H 2 O PET study', International Journal of Cardiovascular Imaging, vol. 41, no. 1, pp. 37-46. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10554-024-03279-5